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Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
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Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
I'll probably move to 3Mbit if it's introduced, depending on price.
With a bit of luck Telewest 3Mbit will be reduced in price and NTL will follow suit. |
Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
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Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
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Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
Is it possible for NTL to allow you to reverse you upload/download speeds?
So instead of having say, 750k down/128k up you could switch to 128k down/750k up? Can this be done and would they allow it? |
Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
It's possible - yes - but it will never happen.
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Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
Ah! Was an act of pure optimism to pose the question in the first place :(
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Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
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Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
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Nothing has any set or intrinsic value; the worth of goods or services is the price that the buyer and the seller agree. If the buyer doesn't agree the price, the seller will reduce the price, if he wants badly enough to sell it that is. :) |
Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
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5GB a month is a pathetic limit, I download 15gig a month on 300k now, and when I used to be on 750k it was around 45-60gig. So now they're gonna put me up to 1Mb and let me download 5gig? lol :rolleyes: this is a con trick, a sleight of hand, smoke and mirrors. Suffice to say I'll be staying at 300k. btw I didn't vote in the poll as 'stay as you are and dont pay ntl their rip-off £25 fee' wasn't an option. |
Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
Sorry to return to the capping issue but this really does bug me.
I find it quite amusing how the internet connectivity business has evolved and history continues to repeat itself. First we had standard PAYG dialup for home users. Initially this usually comprised dialing a POP on a local'ish number and larger ISP's had POP's throughout the country. Heavy users racked up serious bills (I had a number of 600 pound quarterly BT bills back in the early 90's). This continued for a number of years and slowly we moved to ISP's offering single dialup numbers to a national audience and all users could access these numbers at local call rates. Eventually along came all you can eat dialup which was a god send to heavy users. But heaven forbid some users decided to eat all they could and the telco's screamed 'ouch our profits' and started issuing cease and desist orders (not that BT ever showed a loss and made how many million per second?). This coincided with the advent of broadband and the predominant telco's simply stated heavy users need broadband which is an always on all you can eat solution. So heavy users go to broadband and now we find ourselves back at 'ouch our profits' lets return to limited/PAYG solutions. Whilst NTL have to be commended for upping the bandwidth they are going to offer their customers I cannot commend them for introducing hard cap's into the equation. This is a real step backwards for net users and will, as more traditional services such as TV and PSTN telephones become IP bound, become an expensive option for users. What I'd really like to see from NTL is some detail on how they are going to handle overages? What costs are users going to incur per GB over the cap. Or on hitting the cap will users simply loose connectivity or get some form of reduced/slower service? At present NTL have not explained the detail of their plans and seem to be hoping that the glory of offering the fastest home user net connects will mask the restricted nature of the new services. On a side note is business broadband from NTL bound by the current usage guidelines and will business services become capped next year? |
Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
I'm convinced that the 'cap' for each tier will be based on the price point, not the tier of service.
i.e. £17.99 will be a 5GB per month deal, whether you have 300Kb or 1000Kb. £24.99 will be a 30GB per month deal, whether you have 750Kb or 2000Kb - etc - this could also enable a 'turbo' capability, whereby downloads of significant updates can be done at top speed for the tier, other stuff like email at the lower... |
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I can think of someone I know of who manages to download your monthly usage in a week. As I've stated repeatedly before, this is a standard fact of life with the vast majority of mass-market ISPs, 5% of users are responsible for 60-70% of utilisation, and the only reason prices are as they are is that this 5% are subsidised to varying degrees by the other 95%. Again not trying to turn this into a cap thread, just stating the facts as they are. Without the mass of light users who are the vast majority, the service would cost a fortune or be horribly oversubscribed. |
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No doubt some will argue that users are going to gain extra speed. Well what do you know that's gonna cost NTL almost zip ongoing as the cap for most users will be the same (if not less) than current so bandwidth costs to NTL will lessen. I'll be able to use up my allowance in half the time. Whoppy doo. BBand is profitable now. All ISP's are doing by introducing caps + PAYG overages is ensuring they can wring more profit out of the system. They know they will only upset 5% of their user base but set themselves up for increased profits over time as usage levels increase. I very much doubt we will ever see caps increase, instead PAYG will be the way to go as thats where the profit is. Perhaps I'm being cynical but time will tell. |
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